Ukraine hits fuel supplies to
Crimea, sparking a
fuel crisis on the Russian-held peninsula 1 of 5 | Tourists walk along an embankment in
Sevastopol,
Crimea, Monday, May 2, 2022. (AP Photo, File) 2 of 5 | Cars and other vehicles drive on the
Kerch Bridge connecting the Russian mainland and the Crimean Peninsula on Thursday, Feb. 23, 2023. (AP Photo, File) 3 of 5 | A Russian military ship transports cars and people from the Russian mainland to the Crimean Peninsula over the
Kerch Strait on Monday, July 17, 2023. (AP Photo, File) 4 of 5 | In this photo provided by
Sevastopol Mayor
Mikhail Razvozhaev’s Telegram channel on Wednesday, June 10, 2026, firefighters put out a blaze after a Ukrainian drone hit a building housing a panoramic painting that depicts the defense of the city during the 19th century
Crimean War in
Sevastopol,
Crimea. (
Sevastopol Mayor
Mikhail Razvozhaev’s Telegram channel via AP, File) 5 of 5 | People gather at the beach in
Balaklava Bay, a part of
Sevastopol on the Crimean Peninsula, on Sunday, Aug. 9, 2015. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File) By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Updated 3:00 AM MESZ, June 12, 2026 Leer en español Add AP News on Google Add AP News as your preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Share Share Facebook Copy Link copied Print Email X LinkedIn Bluesky Flipboard Pinterest Reddit Ukrainian
drone strikes on refineries, depots and pipelines. Tanker trucks attacked and left ablaze along the land corridor from
Russia to
Crimea. Motorists waiting in long lines at gas stations. In a new blow to the Kremlin’s narrative that Moscow is winning the 4-year-old war in
Ukraine, Kyiv’s forces have targeted supplies to
Crimea, triggering the worst
fuel crisis on the Black Sea peninsula since it was illegally annexed by
Russia in 2014. The persistent attacks reflect the growing intensity and efficiency of
Ukraine’s
drone strikes and have caught
Russia off-guard and struggling for a response. As the country marks the
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Russia Day national holiday on Friday, signaling the start of summer vacations, the gas shortages are threatening to cause further disruptions to the tourism-dependent region with its beaches and resorts. In a rare public acknowledgment, the Kremlin has recognized the scope of the problem and promised to address the issue quickly.
Ukraine’s successes have highlighted its ability to inflict painful damage to
Russia and change the course of the conflict while Moscow’s advances recently have ground to a near halt. On Thursday,
Russia’s full-scale invasion of
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Crimea’s importance to
Russia Crimea has been a jewel in
Russia’s imperial crown since it was seized from Turkic-speaking Tatars in the 18th century after Moscow defeated the Ottoman Empire. Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev transferred
Crimea from
Russia to
Ukraine in 1954 when both republics were part of the USSR. When the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the diamond-shaped peninsula became part of newly independent
Ukraine.
Russia kept a naval base in
Sevastopol, and when a Moscow-friendly Ukrainian president was ousted by a popular uprising in February 2014, Russian President Vladimir Putin sent in troops to overtake
Crimea. Weeks later, Moscow annexed the peninsula following a referendum that most of the world refuses to recognize. Soon afterward, a Moscow-backed separatist insurgency erupted in eastern
Ukraine, and fighting there raged with varying intensity until the February 2022 invasion. Russian troops concentrated in
Crimea quickly seized large parts of southern
Ukraine early in the war and secured the land route to the peninsula. Since early in the war,
Ukraine has fired missiles and drones to try to dislodge Moscow’s hold on the territory. The Ukrainian military sank several Russian warships in the Black Sea and at their Crimean bases, crippling Moscow’s naval capability and forcing it to redeploy its fleet to Novorossiysk.
Ukraine also methodically targeted munitions depots, airfields and Putin’s prized asset, the
Kerch Bridge linking
Crimea to
Russia. The span was struck by a truck bomb in October 2022 that killed five people, blew up two sections of the bridge and required months of repairs. More attacks on the bridge followed in 2023 and 2025. Sine the
Kerch Bridge attacks,
Russia has channeled most fuel and other supplies along the highway and railroad via the occupied territories along the Sea of Azov coast. Those shipments were interrupted last month, when Ukrainian drones hit fuel trucks on the highway that Moscow once deemed to be safe, leaving behind dozens of burning vehicles. Other relentless Ukrainian strikes hit refineries, oil depots and pipelines deep inside
Russia, hurting its oil exports and causing domestic fuel shortages. The Washington-based Institute for the Study of War noted the synergy between the longer-range attacks and those disrupting supplies to
Crimea and other occupied regions. “The long-range strike campaign is therefore reducing
Russia’s production capacity, while the midrange strike campaign is hurting
Russia’s ability to transport the gasoline
Russia is still able to produce,” it said in an analysis. Making maters worse, Ukrainian drones this week repeatedly hit the Chonhar Bridge, which links mainland
Ukraine and
Crimea over a shallow strait. Authorities deployed pontoon bridges. The Ukrainian military said it struck the bridge to disrupt movement of troops, ammunition and fuel from
Crimea. It’s not immediately clear how the fuel disruptions will affect Russian military operations, but residents of
Crimea and other occupied territories are keenly feeling the blow. The peninsula has had periodic fuel shortages from Ukrainian strikes before, but this crisis is the worst since its 2014 annexation. At the end of May, authorities restricted the sale of gasoline to 20 liters (5 1/3 gallons) per vehicle owner per week using prepaid coupons. Those were snapped up immediately following their release on an official messaging app channel, and motorists lined up for hours, waiting to refuel. Social networks have been abuzz with requests and advice on where to find fuel, and authorities launched a hotline for tourists who have found themselves trapped. While fuel shipments over the
Kerch Bridge long has been suspended for security reasons since the Ukrainian attacks, fuel also has been carried by ferries. Those shipments are expected to increase. Some motorists bring their own gas over the bridge from the mainland, but they are restricted to carrying 100 liters (about 26 1/2 gallons) per vehicle. Some speculators are selling gas at double the market price.
Crimea attracted nearly 7 million tourists last year, and it had hoped to top that number this year. The business daily Kommersant reported that nearly 80% of hotel bookings were canceled in late May and early June. Some hotels offered gasoline as a bonus for new bookings, offers that were quickly snapped up. Some travelers were unsettled by a Ukrainian drone attack earlier this week on a passenger train traveling from Moscow to
Crimea, injuring its driver and killing his assistant. That led to a brief suspension of service, with passengers taken by buses. An earlier attack on a commuter train in
Crimea killed one person and injured three others, forcing authorities to shift schedules to limit service during daytime hours. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov acknowledged the Crimean fuel shortages earlier this week and promised that “measures were being taken” to deal with them. The Russian Defense Ministry has been silent about the Ukrainian attacks on the land corridor, while some war bloggers have harshly criticized the military for failing to anticipate the strikes and its slow response. Some suggested military escorts for fuel trucks while others urged stepping up strikes on Ukrainian bridges, fuel storage sites and other infrastructure. Amid the
fuel crisis and the finger-pointing,
Ukraine dealt another symbolic blow to
Russia, striking a historic
Sevastopol building that houses a huge panoramic painting that depicts the defense of the city during the 19th century
Crimean War. The painting was effectively destroyed by fire during the attack, according to Mikhail Razvozhayev,, the Kremlin-appointed head of
Crimea’s largest city. Given Putin’s focus on
Crimea, military blogger Valery Shiryayev said, the attack would certainly anger the Russian leader. “It’s hard to find another work of art, another part of national heritage, whose destruction would be as painful for Putin,” he said.